PICHER, Okla.(AP)
Sue Sigle was hoping the government would offer more money for
her home before she moves away from this pollution-scarred town.
Then the tornado came.
As she began the task of salvage Sunday, Sigle kept a smile on
her face, noting that she was fortunate to be visiting family in
Missouri when the massive twister hit Saturday night, killing at
least six people in this northeastern Oklahoma town.
"I'm OK with everything," Sigle said. "The
Lord is going to take care of anything. ... I was going to move
anyway. I guess I'll just have to move sooner."
That sense of inevitability appeared to grip residents as they
picked through the remnants of their homes. The lead and zinc mines
that made Picher a booming town of about 20,000 in the mid-20th
century closed decades ago; leftover waste has turned the area into
an environmental disaster and a Superfund site.
Many families have moved away to escape the lead pollution,
taking advantage of state and federal buyouts in recent years.
Piles of mine waste, or chat, have long towered over the town
across a highway from the devastated neighborhood; they're now
peppered with debris from homes flattened by the tornado.
The tornado _ spawned by storms that also killed several people
in Missouri and Georgia _ could be the ultimate incentive for those
800 or so residents who have been reluctant to leave, said John
Sparkman, head of the local housing authority.
"I think people probably have had enough," he said.
"There's just nothing to build back to any more."
Some residents, like Sigle, were waiting for better buyout
offers before their homes were damaged.
Gov. Brad Henry, who toured the area both by air and on foot
Sunday, said the buyout program won't stop just because homes
were leveled. He went so far as to say he would
"guarantee" that those awaiting buyouts who lost their
homes would be treated fairly.
"We will continue to assess the situation. ... We will make
sure the people get the assistance that they need," Henry
said. "If they need help to be moved to another location,
we'll do everything we can to help them do that. I think
it's kind of speculative for me to sit here and say exactly
what's going to happen. I don't know at this
point."
Sen. Jim Inhofe, R-Okla., said he too would work to keep the
buyout program on track.
Another question is how the Federal Emergency Management Agency
will approach the disaster.
Because of Picher's Superfund status, FEMA is unlikely to
grant assistance to homeowners to rebuild in the town, said
Oklahoma Emergency Management Director Albert Ashwood. But he
echoed Henry's and Inhofe's assurances about the federal
buyout program, which is funded by the Environmental Protection
Agency.
FEMA crews are scheduled to arrive in Picher on Monday to
examine the damage, state emergency management spokeswoman
Michelann Ooten said.
One of the homes those crews likely will examine will be that of
Jeff Reeves, 43, who has followed his grandfather and father as
Picher's fire chief. He has lived in Picher all his life and
has watched it slowly decline, first from the closure of the mines,
then from the mine waste.
"With everything else that's going on here, I'm not
sure there is a recovery," he said, adding that city officials
and the committee overseeing the buyout "are going to have to
make some decisions as far as proceeding rapidly with the buyout
process and getting it taken care of."
Among the first things Sigle looked for when she arrived at her
house Sunday afternoon was her late husband's prize collection
of Mickey Mantle memorabilia.
Friends already had removed a safe containing the collection
from what used to be her bedroom, and she quickly opened the
safe's door.
"Oh, hallelujah!" Sigle said when she saw the baseball
cards _ Mantle grew up in nearby Commerce _ and an undamaged ball
signed by the former New York Yankees star.
Sigle, who has taught second- and third-graders in Picher for 37
years, also found a slightly soiled T-shirt that read, in part,
"Gorilla Spirit Lives On," a nod to the mascot of Picher
High School, which will probably close in the next few years.
The storm will speed up what was probably going to happen
anyway, she said.
"I know I lost a lot of junk. I guess it's time to
clean up and see what I need."
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